The posthuman condition: Insights for decolonising curriculum in childhood education

South African Journal of Childhood Education

 
 
Field Value
 
Title The posthuman condition: Insights for decolonising curriculum in childhood education
 
Creator Maistry, Suriamurthee M. Du Preez, Petro
 
Subject posthumanism; childhood education; dualism; decolonisation posthumanism; dualism; decolonisation; childhood education; more-than-human
Description Background: Recent attempts to rekindle the decolonisation of education project in South Africa, is a reaction to perceptions that there are fundamental frailties in the existing curriculum. Childhood education is yet to take up the challenge in any substantive way.Aim: To explore the insights critical posthumanism might offer in attempting to address a comprehensive decolonial effort in early childhood education transformational initiatives.Setting: This essay is framed within the context of curriculum decolonisation and transformation work in early childhood education.Methods: This experimental think-piece, attempts to theorise early childhood education alongside critical posthumanism.Results: Staying true to posthuman ways of thinking, doing and becoming, we deliberately avoided presenting any determinist, neatly packaged ‘results’, in order to further open up the debate to include alternative ways of thinking and doing curriculum work in early childhood ecologies.Conclusions: Early childhood transformation initiatives, has to recognise the fundamental embeddedness of the existing school subjects in Western-Eurocentric humanist tradition. The effects of this canonical orientation are, that the tenets of Western-Eurocentrism remain unchallenged, that a racialised colonial education prevails in contemporary times, and that the centering of the adult human at the expense of the more-than-human, including child, is sustained. The nature-culture and child or adult dualisms prevail and, a consolidation of a deficit, sub-human construction of children, as immature, fragile and innocent. Critical Posthumanism suggests thinking anew.Contribution: An interrogation of the assumptions on which contemporary childhood education is based, and consideration for the advancement of posthumanist ways of thinking, doing, and becoming.
 
Publisher AOSIS
 
Contributor n/a
Date 2024-04-29
 
Type info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion — —
Format text/html application/epub+zip text/xml application/pdf
Identifier 10.4102/sajce.v14i1.1436
 
Source South African Journal of Childhood Education; Vol 14, No 1 (2024); 5 pages 2223-7682 2223-7674
 
Language eng
 
Relation
The following web links (URLs) may trigger a file download or direct you to an alternative webpage to gain access to a publication file format of the published article:

https://sajce.co.za/index.php/sajce/article/view/1436/2792 https://sajce.co.za/index.php/sajce/article/view/1436/2793 https://sajce.co.za/index.php/sajce/article/view/1436/2794 https://sajce.co.za/index.php/sajce/article/view/1436/2795
 
Coverage — — —
Rights Copyright (c) 2024 Suriamurthee Moonsamy Maistry, Petro du Preez https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
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